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A burst chasing x-ray polarimeter

Authors :
Peter F. Bloser
Bing Zhang
T. Sakamoto
Philip Kaaret
Keith Jahoda
Mark L. McConnell
James M. Ryan
Scott Barthelmy
Jason S. Legere
Joanne E. Hill
John R. Macri
J. Kevin Black
P. Deines-Jones
Billy Smith
Source :
UV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Space Instrumentation for Astronomy XV.
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
SPIE, 2007.

Abstract

Tihs is a viewgraph presentation of a discussion of the X-ray Polarimeter. Gamma-ray bursts are one of the most powerful explosions in the universe and have been detected out to distances of almost 13 billion light years. The exact origin of these energetic explosions is still unknown but the resulting huge release of energy is thought to create a highly relativistic jet of material and a power-law distribution of electrons. There are several theories describing the origin of the prompt GRB emission that currently cannot be distinguished. Measurements of the linear polarization would provide unique and important constraints on the mechanisms thought to drive these powerful explosions. We present the design of a sensitive, and extremely versatile gamma-ray burst polarimeter. The instrument is a photoelectric polarimeter based on a time-projection chamber. The photoelectric time-projection technique combines high sensitivity with broad band-pass and is potentially the most powerful method between 2 and 100 keV where the photoelectric effect is the dominant interaction process We present measurements of polarized and unpolarized X-rays obtained with a prototype detector and describe the two mission concepts, the Gamma-Ray Burst Polarimeter (GRBP) for thc U S Naval Academy satellite MidSTAR-2, and thc Low Energy Polarimeter (LEP) onboard POET, a broadband polarimetry concept for a small explorer mission.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
UV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Space Instrumentation for Astronomy XV
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a4edbd06da1a3cd14091723dbbe53e7a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.734403